

The fastest and easiest way to get those moving images from your gameplay is various small screen-capture-to-GIF applications.
#Licecap quality settings free
With free tools available there’s no reason not to make your promotional material stand out during “Screenshot Saturday” and even if you don’t like to share, GIFs are great for documenting the progress of your development. This can be a little confusing, I agree.)Īs to your specific question and settings, for a two hour movie, Sonarr would seek files that meet the following criteria:Īre greater than or equal to 3.0 GB in size (Minimum Limit at 1.5 GB/hr)Īre smaller than or equal to 9.0 GB in size (Maximum Limit at 4.5 GB/hr)įurther, it would prefer releases that are 8.6 GB in size (4.3 GB/hr) - if none are available, it will move further away from your preferred size to find a file that still falls within your Minimum and Maximum Limits.As wise men say, “A good GIF of your game speaks louder than hundreds of screenshots” and, while dealing with audiences with short attention spans, you need strong visual hook to punch a viewer in the face with all the awesomeness your game has. This is equivalent to the 5.6 GB/hr shown on the middle slider's green number. (As an example of the above, the Preferred value for Unknown quality shown here in the Advanced settings - the area to the right of the sliders - is 95 MB/min. Not sure why they decided to mix the interface's units like that, but the two numbers are equivalent. One weird bit is that the advanced settings (the area to the right of the sliders, where you can type in exact numbers for each setting) are displayed in MB/min, while the sliders display their units as GB/hr. Really, the main difference from previous versions is the addition of the Preferred (middle) slider, which allows you to set a file size preference instead of Sonarr always going for the largest file size first - which is a really nice feature, IMO!

You can hover your mouse over each number to see estimated filesizes at various lengths. However, you can set this to prefer any size you like - if you'd prefer your movies to be more around the 4.0 GB/hr mark, but are still okay with larger or smaller filesizes, you can tell Sonarr that.
#Licecap quality settings download
By default, this tends to be pegged at the upper bound - meaning that Radarr will prefer to download the highest GB/hr rate files it can find that also fall within your Minimum and Maximum Limits. The green number represents your center slider, and displays your Preferred data rate (in GB/hr). Files above this rate will be excluded from possible downloads. The orange number represents your rightmost slider, and displays the Maximum Limit acceptable data rate (in GB/hr). Most quality settings have this pegged at zero by default, which hasn't been a problem for me yet, but YMMV.


Files that are below this rate will be excluded from possible downloads. The blue number represents your leftmost slider, and displays the Minimum Limit data rate (in GB/hr) you are willing to accept in your files. So, regarding the numbers below the sliders, my understanding is this:
